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Company of Fools The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
24th Season: 2019 / 2020 Play Readings

The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail

FREE Play Reading

January 23 - January 23, 2020

By Jerome Lawrence & Robert E. Lee
Directed by David Janeski

In 1846, the essayist, philosopher, abolitionist, and naturalist Henry David Thoreau spent a night in jail after refusing to pay tax money that would support the war President James Polk singlehandedly waged against Mexico. This incident later provided the basis for Thoreau’s essay “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience” and serves as the inspiration for Lee’s and Lawrence’s fictionalized account of that evening and the events leading up to it. While the play offers insight into the man and his meditations — his transcendentalist world view, his witty disregard for organized religion and his penchant for nature and civil disobedience — it also concerns itself with what weighs heavily in our own politics today.

Part of SVMoA's BIG IDEA project The Bottomlessness of a Pond: Transcendentalism, Nature and Spirit.
Big Idea

Part of a Sun Valley Museum of Art BIG IDEA project

Ticket Prices

FREE! (Suggested donation $10, advance seat reservation recommended)